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e existence of the saint is attested by the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which for the year 798 records t |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, however, gives the year of his d |
unknown version(s) of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, possibly in Latin translation. |
est written reference to the town is in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, where it is spelled Rumcofan, li |
ia, but the war continued: according to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, "Cadwallon and Penda went and di |
g, but became king soon after Hatfield; the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, however, says that he became kin |
th battle and campaign are described in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
ice of his death occurs in the contemporary | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
Eadberht I died in 748, according to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
e early to mid-10th century recorded in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
ia, and was called King of the Welsh by the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
it was not necessarily 901 as stated in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
cribed in the entry for the year 851 of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
He is not mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
Bishop Milred's death is recorded in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
The battle is also mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
enda (who ruled until 706) according to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
he term "Great Heathen Army" is used in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
Battle of Peonnum in 658, mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
ble about him is written principally in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
thwestern England which are reported in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
storia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum or the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
iginally recorded in the 675AD entry of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
ainst Geraint of Dumnonia, according to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle; John of Worcester states that Ge |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, ed. and tr. |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, in 875 as the Danes ravaged Lin |
nstruction, the foundations of the original | Anglo-Saxon Church were discovered. |
Cubitt | Anglo-Saxon Church Councils p. 13 |
Cubitt | Anglo-Saxon Church Councils p. 42 |
tural historians now believe that though an | Anglo-Saxon church made of timber did exist on the site |
The Homilies of the | Anglo-Saxon Church (1844) |
e the excavated foundations of the original | Anglo-Saxon church and a large kerbed round barrow show |
St Gregory's Minster is an | Anglo-Saxon church with a rare sundial, in Kirkdale nea |
town, in Mercia and near London, where the | Anglo-Saxon Church is recorded as holding the important |
ttended by bishops from the entirety of the | Anglo-Saxon church, both from Northumbria and from the |
There is an 8th century | Anglo-Saxon church, and nearby Ledston Hall. |
at is believed to be the site of an earlier | Anglo-Saxon church. |
a compilation of epigrams and epigraphs on | Anglo-Saxon churchmen, some of whom are known only from |
The Empire In Solution With Chapters On | Anglo-Saxon Civilization (1931) |
nity about 600, they laid the foundation of | Anglo-Saxon civilization and the present Great Britain. |
enerally listed along with "Real estate" in | Anglo-Saxon classifications. |
Coven derives from the | Anglo-Saxon cofum, the dative plural of cofa, which mea |
a grave in Canterbury, and is the earliest | Anglo-Saxon coin, though it may not have been used as m |
streaming for tin uncovered a hoard of 114 | Anglo-Saxon coins together with a silver chalice and ot |
leading family settling the area during the | Anglo-Saxon colonisation of England. |
The occurrence of the | Anglo-Saxon compounds ymbren-tid ("Embertide"), ymbren- |
The | Anglo-Saxon conception of family as the basis of law wa |
It is now open farmland, but has Roman and | Anglo-Saxon connections. |
lin was one of the key figures in the final | Anglo-Saxon conquest of southern Britain. |
efers to a enclave of Britons surviving the | Anglo-Saxon conquest of the area. |
e majority of the latter kingdom fell under | Anglo-Saxon control in the 8th century. |
rom "Ulla's Wick", where wick or wich is an | Anglo-Saxon corruption of the Roman vicus meaning a pla |
yed more success in Latin countries than in | Anglo-Saxon countries. |
s if related by a female story-teller in an | Anglo-Saxon court, the author feeling it would have bee |
(see | Anglo-Saxon Crafts by Kevin Leahy, p75-76) |
This rune was inscribed on more | Anglo-Saxon cremation urns than any other symbol. |
ns there include the decapitated remains of | Anglo-Saxon criminals. |
Legg's cross is an | Anglo-Saxon cross in County Durham, England, about 4 mi |
The churchyard contains an | Anglo-Saxon cross shaft. |
An | Anglo-Saxon cross shaft (late 8th/early 9th century AD) |
much older cross, and the upper part of an | Anglo-Saxon cross shaft. |
the largest and most elaborately decorated | Anglo-Saxon crosses to have survived mostly intact, and |
Unusually for | Anglo-Saxon crosses, the stone is not local: "the mediu |
ng across the river valley, replaced by the | Anglo-Saxon crossing of the River Stort some 600 metres |
Wyrd is a concept in | Anglo-Saxon culture roughly corresponding to fate or pe |
oins and stone carvings, and exhibits about | Anglo-Saxon culture, Bede's life and works, the life of |
ca a deep current of Hispanophobia pervades | Anglo-Saxon culture. |
The English term king is derived from the | Anglo-Saxon cyning, which in turn is derived from the C |
Rask's | Anglo-Saxon, Danish and Icelandic Grammars were brought |
Church of St John the Evangelist is of late | Anglo-Saxon date and parts may well span the Norman con |
hn the Evangelist, Milborne Port is of late | Anglo-Saxon date, and parts may well span the Norman co |
Cavenham, which is generally assumed to be | Anglo-Saxon, dating to the 6th or 7th century. |
The name comes from the | Anglo-Saxon dear (deer) and geard (fold). |
le of local self-government, a principle of | Anglo-Saxon derivation which, surviving the Norman Conq |
tially accepted by native-born Americans of | Anglo-Saxon descent as white. |
An | Anglo-Saxon Dictionary |
An | Anglo-Saxon Dictionary is a dictionary of Old English, |
ere originally prelates who administered an | Anglo-Saxon diocese between the 7th and 9th centuries. |
as originally a prelate who administered an | Anglo-Saxon diocese in the 10th and 11th centuries, and |
nt occupancy next appears in 1042, when the | Anglo-Saxon Earl of Wessex, Harold Godwinson (later Kin |
of of Northumbria (1072-75, the last of the | Anglo-Saxon Earls of England) who she had betrayed over |
Brent Ditch is generally assumed to be an | Anglo-Saxon earthwork in Southern Cambridgeshire, Engla |
written a number of leading articles on the | Anglo-Saxon economy, his second area of interest. |
Both the Celtic (Irish and Pictish) and | Anglo-Saxon elites had long traditions of metalwork of |
omilies” from The Blackwell Encyclopedia of | Anglo-Saxon England (1992). . |
ho lived in, or was closely connected with, | Anglo-Saxon England from 597 to 1042. |
Anglo-Saxon England 32. | |
Stenton | Anglo-Saxon England pp. |
Anglo-Saxon England (3rd ed.). | |
Anglo-Saxon England (Third ed.). | |
See also: History of | Anglo-Saxon England |
Anglo-Saxon England 14 (1985): 1-36. | |
An Introduction to | Anglo-Saxon England (Second ed.). |
riet H, The Battle of Hastings: The Fall of | Anglo-Saxon England Atlandtic Books, London 2008 |
Stenton, Sir Frank M. | Anglo-Saxon England Third Edition. |
Anglo-Saxon England is an annual peer-reviewed academic | |
The Prosopography of | Anglo-Saxon England (PASE) is a major research project |
e village as 'Nortune', noting that even in | Anglo-Saxon England immediately before the Norman Conqu |
age is a list of territorial assessments in | Anglo-Saxon England which lists regions and the number |
of the Isle of Wight and last pagan king in | Anglo-Saxon England until the Vikings in the 9th centur |
Later in | Anglo-Saxon England it was a unit used for assessing la |
atfield Chase near Doncaster, Yorkshire, in | Anglo-Saxon England between the Northumbrians under Edw |
historians to refer conveniently to all of | Anglo-Saxon England south of the River Humber, and not |
Barbara(1990), "Kings and Kingdoms of Early | Anglo-Saxon England", Routledge. |
s", in Stenton, D.M. (ed.), Preparatory to ' | Anglo-Saxon England'being the collected Papers of Frank |
He was the author of | Anglo-Saxon England, a volume of the Oxford History of |
on, wrote a preface to the third edition of | Anglo-Saxon England, published after his death, and edi |
The Weorgoran were a tribe or clan in | Anglo-Saxon England, possibly forming an early settleme |
ristianizing Kinship: Ritual Sponsorship in | Anglo-Saxon England, Cornell University Press (1998), I |
Frank Stenton in | Anglo-Saxon England, and Ann Williams in her DNB articl |
ember 1967) was a 20th century historian of | Anglo-Saxon England, and president of the Royal Histori |
F. M. Stenton, | Anglo-Saxon England, 3rd ed. |
Saints and Relics in | Anglo-Saxon England, (1989) |
, from Old English) were a tribe or clan in | Anglo-Saxon England, possibly forming an early administ |
The Husmerae were a tribe or clan in | Anglo-Saxon England, possibly forming an early settleme |
r, Martin (1992) "The Liudhard Medalet", in | Anglo-Saxon England, Volume 20, eds. |
est-selling books on the shamanic wisdom of | Anglo-Saxon England, and for his award-winning course a |
The first Viking raid on | Anglo-Saxon England, is thought to have been between AD |
The Stoppingas was a tribe or clan of | Anglo-Saxon England, based around Wootton Wawen and the |
ing that is known about anyone who lived in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
Anglo-Saxon England. | |
history of the Anglo-Saxons, see History of | Anglo-Saxon England. |
Life in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
The Blackwell Encyclopedia of | Anglo-Saxon England. |
Stenton, Frank M. | Anglo-Saxon England. |
The Coming of Christianity to | Anglo-Saxon England. |
S.J. Ridyard, The Royal Saints of | Anglo-Saxon England. |
Bloodfeud: Murder and Revenge in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
Kings and Kingdoms of Early | Anglo-Saxon England. |
This was a known practice in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
led to the introduction of Christianity to | Anglo-Saxon England. |
William A. Chaney, The Cult of Kingship in | Anglo-Saxon England: The Transition from Paganism to Ch |
transcript of B.M. Cotton Otho B. xi." in: | Anglo-Saxon England; 3 (1973); pp. |
Stenton, Sir Frank M. | Anglo-Saxon England; 3rd edition. |
f the transition from post-Roman Britain to | Anglo-Saxon England; a certainty that would be the more |
Kings and Kingdoms of Early | Anglo-Saxon English. |
(meaning "elk") is based on the name of the | Anglo-Saxon eolh ("elk") which is of the same shape but |
tr.) Beowulf: An | Anglo-Saxon Epic Poem (D. C. Heath, 1897 |
Nick Lyon that is very loosely based on the | Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf. |
c in London in 1993, his own version of the | Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf for both the Royal Nation |
He is mentioned in lines 1958-1963 of the | Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf as Garmund the father of Offa |
irst monastery was founded in 657 AD by the | Anglo-Saxon era King of Northumbria, Oswy (Oswiu) as St |
AD 450, but the site was reoccupied in the | Anglo-Saxon era and a West Saxon charter drawn up betwe |
e causeway may have been first built in the | Anglo-Saxon era, and rebuilt in the late 11th century b |
at Prestbury ("priest's enclosure") in the | Anglo-Saxon era. |
The | Anglo-Saxon estate of Wadesleah is recorded in the Dome |
innuis' and whose twelfth victory held back | Anglo-Saxon expansion for fifty years. |
There is a working reconstructed | Anglo-Saxon farm called Gyrwe (pronounced 'Yeerweh') af |
The church, with its | Anglo-Saxon features, is of major importance to our und |
Comparisons to the | Anglo-Saxon figure of Beowa (Old English "barley") have |
s Scadflet and Shatfliet - derived from the | Anglo-Saxon fleot, meaning a shallow creek or bay - the |
ns of St Helen's Bishopsgate (from Minicen, | Anglo-Saxon for a nun; minchery, a nunnery). |
cient name still in use is lydgate which is | Anglo-Saxon for a hanging gate. |
rst Friday in March is so called from Lide, | Anglo-Saxon for March. |
ns a Wood Pigeon, the second comes from the | Anglo-Saxon for a small valley. |
Whitbourne ( | Anglo-Saxon for "white stream") is a village in Eastern |
sometimes simply called a bourne, from the | Anglo-Saxon for a stream flowing from a spring, althoug |
it sits in a steep sided valley ("dean" is | Anglo-Saxon for valley) on the extreme north-east of th |
His name is the | Anglo-Saxon form of the Gothic Totila. |
iest name, Franchtone, was derived from the | anglo-saxon Franca or Franco (the personal name of the |
rman times was the direct descendant of the | Anglo-Saxon freeman, and that the typical Anglo-Saxon s |
dge was Elrington and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon from 1991 to 1998. |
Ear (rune), a part of the | Anglo-Saxon Futhorc (runic alphabet) |
As rune of the | Anglo-Saxon futhorc, it is called is. |
It also contains a description of the | Anglo-Saxon futhorc. |
om the Old English *Frige-hop: Frige was an | Anglo-Saxon goddess cognate with the Old Norse goddess |
e Staffordshire Hoard, the largest hoard of | Anglo-Saxon gold ever found. |
d he changed his name from Gold to the more | Anglo-Saxon Gould. |
To this work he prefixed an | Anglo-Saxon grammar. |
86 | Anglo-Saxon graves were uncovered between 1893 and 1894 |
ea: a 7th century gold cross found in 1967; | Anglo-Saxon graves in 1913; and the remains of Roman ho |
razeley around 1598 and is derived from the | Anglo-Saxon Griesley meaning grazing land (meadow). |
al Gibor rune (the name may be based on the | Anglo-Saxon Gyfu rune). |
Anglo-Saxon had a larger selection of endings for the G | |
kelda is in fact simply a corruption of the | Anglo-Saxon haligkelda, meaning healing spring. |
By birth an | Anglo-Saxon, he became archbishop in 655 and held the o |
Mercian supremacy over the kingdoms of the | Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. |
Mercia's supremacy over the kingdoms of the | Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. |
n which the Kingdom of Mercia dominated the | Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. |
longer than those of other kingdoms in the | Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. |
surprising new information about Celtic and | Anglo-Saxon heritage on the British mainland. |
on the saint, and it is presumed he was an | Anglo-Saxon hermit. |
Finn and Hengest are two | Anglo-Saxon heroes appearing in the Old English epic po |
The Gosforth Cross is a large stone | Anglo-Saxon high cross in the churchyard at Gosforth in |
Lying between the two villages, is a | Anglo-Saxon Hill-fort. |
However, the famous | Anglo-Saxon historian Sir Frank Stenton and his wife, w |
Evidence from the eighth century | Anglo-Saxon historian, Bede points to the Picts also be |
me one of the earliest scholars to document | Anglo-Saxon historical manuscripts in the Cottonian col |
tings to a wide readership and explored the | Anglo-Saxon history of Suffolk. |
He was lecturer in | Anglo-Saxon History at Cambridge from 1978, reader in A |
ining, he dedicated himself to the study of | Anglo-Saxon history and literature, and wrote two influ |
Essays in | Anglo-Saxon History. |
An | Anglo-Saxon holy woman, she was thought to have been ma |
astle was constructed on top of high-status | Anglo-Saxon housing, probably belonging to former house |
aning for the name is White Water, from the | Anglo-Saxon hwit (white) and ey (water), and probably r |
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